from mercurial import ancestor, commands, hg, ui, util # graph is a dict of child->parent adjacency lists for this graph: # o 13 # | # | o 12 # | | # | | o 11 # | | |\ # | | | | o 10 # | | | | | # | o---+ | 9 # | | | | | # o | | | | 8 # / / / / # | | o | 7 # | | | | # o---+ | 6 # / / / # | | o 5 # | |/ # | o 4 # | | # o | 3 # | | # | o 2 # |/ # o 1 # | # o 0 graph = {0: [-1], 1: [0], 2: [1], 3: [1], 4: [2], 5: [4], 6: [4], 7: [4], 8: [-1], 9: [6, 7], 10: [5], 11: [3, 7], 12: [9], 13: [8]} pfunc = graph.get class mockchangelog(object): parentrevs = graph.get def runmissingancestors(revs, bases): print "%% ancestors of %s and not of %s" % (revs, bases) print ancestor.missingancestors(revs, bases, pfunc) def test_missingancestors(): # Empty revs runmissingancestors([], [1]) runmissingancestors([], []) # If bases is empty, it's the same as if it were [nullrev] runmissingancestors([12], []) # Trivial case: revs == bases runmissingancestors([0], [0]) runmissingancestors([4, 5, 6], [6, 5, 4]) # With nullrev runmissingancestors([-1], [12]) runmissingancestors([12], [-1]) # 9 is a parent of 12. 7 is a parent of 9, so an ancestor of 12. 6 is an # ancestor of 12 but not of 7. runmissingancestors([12], [9]) runmissingancestors([9], [12]) runmissingancestors([12, 9], [7]) runmissingancestors([7, 6], [12]) # More complex cases runmissingancestors([10], [11, 12]) runmissingancestors([11], [10]) runmissingancestors([11], [10, 12]) runmissingancestors([12], [10]) runmissingancestors([12], [11]) runmissingancestors([10, 11, 12], [13]) runmissingancestors([13], [10, 11, 12]) def genlazyancestors(revs, stoprev=0, inclusive=False): print ("%% lazy ancestor set for %s, stoprev = %s, inclusive = %s" % (revs, stoprev, inclusive)) return ancestor.lazyancestors(mockchangelog, revs, stoprev=stoprev, inclusive=inclusive) def printlazyancestors(s, l): print [n for n in l if n in s] def test_lazyancestors(): # Empty revs s = genlazyancestors([]) printlazyancestors(s, [3, 0, -1]) # Standard example s = genlazyancestors([11, 13]) printlazyancestors(s, [11, 13, 7, 9, 8, 3, 6, 4, 1, -1, 0]) # Including revs s = genlazyancestors([11, 13], inclusive=True) printlazyancestors(s, [11, 13, 7, 9, 8, 3, 6, 4, 1, -1, 0]) # Test with stoprev s = genlazyancestors([11, 13], stoprev=6) printlazyancestors(s, [11, 13, 7, 9, 8, 3, 6, 4, 1, -1, 0]) s = genlazyancestors([11, 13], stoprev=6, inclusive=True) printlazyancestors(s, [11, 13, 7, 9, 8, 3, 6, 4, 1, -1, 0]) # The C gca algorithm requires a real repo. These are textual descriptions of # dags that have been known to be problematic. dagtests = [ '+2*2*2/*3/2', '+3*3/*2*2/*4*4/*4/2*4/2*2', ] def test_gca(): u = ui.ui() for i, dag in enumerate(dagtests): repo = hg.repository(u, 'gca%d' % i, create=1) cl = repo.changelog if not util.safehasattr(cl.index, 'ancestors'): # C version not available return commands.debugbuilddag(u, repo, dag) # Compare the results of the Python and C versions. This does not # include choosing a winner when more than one gca exists -- we make # sure both return exactly the same set of gcas. for a in cl: for b in cl: cgcas = sorted(cl.index.ancestors(a, b)) pygcas = sorted(ancestor.ancestors(cl.parentrevs, a, b)) if cgcas != pygcas: print "test_gca: for dag %s, gcas for %d, %d:" % (dag, a, b) print " C returned: %s" % cgcas print " Python returned: %s" % pygcas if __name__ == '__main__': test_missingancestors() test_lazyancestors() test_gca()